Mangalwedha

Mangalwedha is a town in the Solapur district in the Indian state of Maharashtra.[2][3] It is the birthplace of Shri Jayatirtha, also called Teekacharya, one of the prominent saints of the Dvaita school of Vedanta.

Mangalwedha
Town
Mangalwedha
Location in Maharashtra, India
Coordinates: 17.51667°N 75.46667°E / 17.51667; 75.46667
Country India
StateMaharashtra
DistrictSolapur
Government
  TypeMunicipal Council
Population
 (2011)
  Total21,824
Language
  OfficialMarathi
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
413305[1]
Vehicle registrationMH-13
Websitehttp://www.mangalwedha.com

Geography

The city of Mangalwedha is situated 55 km west of the district headquarters at Solapur and 25 km southeast of Pandharpur city.

Mangalwedha shares its boundaries with Pandharpur, Sangola, Mohol, Jath, and Vijapur in Karnataka.

History

Mangalwedha is also known as the "Land of Saints" as Saint Jayatirtha, Saint Damaji, Saint Kanhopatra, Saint Basaveshwera, and Saint Chokhamela are said to have come from Mangalwedha during the 14th century.

Mangalwedha is also known as Jwariche Kothar.

The major crops that are grown in and around Mangalwedha include Jowar, Bajra, groundnut, and corn. Mangalwedha's Jowar and Bajra have received geographical indications (GI) tags.

In the 14th century, Mangalwedha was ruled by the Bidar Sultanate followed by the Bijapur Sultanate.

Huljanti village is known for the Mahalingaraya deity and Biroba deity and as well as having a large fair during Diwali. Many people from Maharashtra and Karnataka come there to worship their deities.

Cuisine

Mangalwedha is known for its special cuisine of jowar bhakri and salsa made from coarsely ground green chilis, kharda/thecha, and onion and chutney of groundnuts. Bhaji (a fritter made from gram flour) is another delicacy from Mangalwedha. It is also known for its spicy bhel, vada pav, and puri bhaji.

Demographics

As of the 2011 Census of India, Mangalwedha has a population of 21,824 consisting of 11,109 males and 10,715 females. There were 2,510 children ages 0-6.[4]

Although the official language of Mangalwedha is Marathi, the town has a remarkable number of Kannada speakers.[5]

gollark: Does that actually work? I thought of zero-size/invisible text after hearing about that sort of software, so I'd assume they also considered it.
gollark: Actually, God has been dead ever since Contingency REPEALED PENUMBRAE, in 1996.
gollark: Probably not that many? I'd assume lots of people photograph geese and then post it to social media or just store it locally. The dataset presumably only contains ones which someone submits.
gollark: Web crawlers and a goose classifier.
gollark: (I have VPSes with little storage and fast network connectivity, and my server with lots of storage but a slow network, but nothing with a fast network and lots of storage)

References

  1. "MANGALVEDHA Pin Code, Search MANGALVEDHA SOLAPUR PinCode". www.citypincode.in.
  2. Mahesh Bhandarkawathekar, Gopalrao Deshmukh (19 February 2015). "एक लढाई : शिवरायांची दख्खन स्वारी अन् मंगळवेढा भेट, मुघलांनी घेतली माघार" [Ēk Laḍhā'ī: Śivarāyān̄cī Dakhkhan Svārī An Maṅgaḷvēḍhā Bhēṭ, Mughalānnī Ghētlī Māghār]. Divya Marathi (in Marathi). Pandharpur. Retrieved 10 June 2015.
  3. "Census of India 2011" (PDF). censusindia.gov.in.
  4. "Census of India: Search Details". Census Commission of India. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  5. The Dynasties of the Kanarese Districts of the Bombay Presidency"(1894) J.F.Fleet, Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency (Vol-1, Part-II, Book-III). ISBN 81-206-0277-3.
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